traitor Matthias had access to the procedures, and to his grace's seal. He ordered one of the devices removed from storage and transported to Boston.' She waited as the shocked muttering subsided. 'More recently, we learned that the Americans had learned of this weapon. Our traitor had apparently threatened them with it. They indicated their displeasure and demanded our cooperation in retrieving it. I think'-her gaze flickered towards Carl-'that most likely they found it and, by doing so, decided to send us a message. Either that, or our traitor has struck at us-but he is no world-walker. Meanwhile, we know the American secret police hold some of ours prisoner.'
'But how-'
'What are we going to-
He fell silent. Carl cleared his throat. Deceptively mildly, he asked, 'Can we get our hands on some more?'
Olga, who had been rolling the empty water glass between her hands, put it down. 'That's already taken care of,' she said.
'In any event, it's not a solution,' Riordan said dismissively. 'At best it's a minimal deterrent. We can hurt them-we can kill tens of thousands-but you know how the Americans respond to an attack. They are relentless, and they will slaughter millions without remorse to avenge a pinprick, should it embarrass them. Worse, their councils and congresses are so contrived that
'Such as the Gruinmarkt,' said one of the new faces at the table, who had been sitting quietly at the back of the room until now. Heads turned towards him. 'My apologies, milady. But…' He shrugged, impatiently. 'Someone needs to get to the
'Quite right,' muttered Carl.
'Earl Wu.' Riordan looked at him. 'You spoke out of turn.
'Then I apologize.' Wu looked unrepentant.
The staring match threatened to escalate into outright acrimony. Olga took a deep breath. 'I believe his lordship is referring to certain informed speculation circulating in the intelligence committee over the past couple of days,' she said. 'Rumors.'
'What rumors?' Riordan looked at her.
'We take our ability for granted.' Olga raised a hand to her throat, to the thin gold chain from which hung a locket containing the Clan sigil. 'And for a long time we've assumed that we were limited to the two worlds, to
Getting to see the colonel was a nontrivial problem; he was a busy man, and Mike was on medical leave with a leg that wasn't going to bear his weight any time soon and a wiretap on his phone line. But he needed to talk to the colonel. Colonel Smith was, if not a friend, then at least the kind of boss who gave a shit what happened to his subordinates. The kind who figured a chain of command ran in two directions, not one. Unlike Dr. James and his shadowy sponsors.
After James's false flag ambulance had dropped him off at the hospital to be poked and prodded, Mike had caught a taxi home, lost in thought. A bomb in a mobile phone, to be handed out like candy and detonated at will, was a scary kind of message to send. It said,
Mike's total exposure on the other side of the wall of worlds was measured in days, but he'd seen enough (hell, he'd smelled, heard, and tasted enough) to suspect that Dr. James was working on very incomplete information-or his plans had very little to do with the reality on the ground of the Gruinmarkt. Worse, he seemed to be just about ignoring the Clan, the enigmatic world-walkers who'd been a huge thorn in the DEA's collective ass for the past thirty years or more; it was almost as if he figured that a sufficient display of shock and awe would make them fold without a fight. But in Mike's experience, beating on somebody without giving them any way out was a great way to make them do their damnedest to kill you. Mike's instinct for self-preservation told him that pursuing the matter was a bad idea, and normally he'd have listened to it, but he had an uneasy feeling that this situation broke all the rules. If Dr. James was really off the rails someone needed to call him on it-and the logical person wasn't Mike but his boss.
It took Mike a day to nerve himself to make his move. He spent it at home, planning, running through all the outcomes he could imagine. 'What can possibly go wrong?' he asked Oscar, while making a list of bullet points on a legal pad. The elderly tomcat paused from washing his paw to give him such a look of bleak suspicion that Mike had to smile. 'It's like that, huh?'
The next morning, he shoehorned himself into his car and drove carefully to a nearby strip mall, which had seen better days, and where, if he remembered correctly, there might still be some beaten-up pay phones tucked away in a corner. His memory turned out to be correct. Staking out a booth and using his mobile as an address book, he dialed a certain exdirectory number.
'Hello?' It wasn't Colonel Smith, but the voice was familiar. 'Janice? It's Mike Fleming here. Can I please have a word with the colonel?'
There was a pause. 'Mike? You're on an unsecured line, you know that?'
'I have a problem with my home phone. Can you put me through?'
A longer pause. 'I-see. Please hold.' The hold music cut off after half a minute. 'Okay, I'm transferring you now.'
'Mike?' It was Colonel Smith. He tensed. Until now, he hadn't been entirely sure it was going to work, but now he was committed, upcoming security vetting or no.
'Hi, boss.'
'Mike, you're still signed off sick. What's up?' Smith sounded concerned.
'Oh, nothing much. I was wondering, though, if you'd be free to do lunch sometime?'
'If I'd be-' There was a muffled sound, as of a hand covering a mic. 'Lunch? Oh, right. Look, I'm tied up right now, but how about we brown bag it some time soon?'
Mike nodded to himself. Message received: The last time the colonel had dropped round with a brown bag there'd been a bomb and a gun in it. 'Sure. It's not urgent, I don't want to drag you out of the office-how about next
